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Honourable Dr. K.L.Rao

Honourable Dr. K.L.Rao. 108 th Birth Day Celebration. SMART POWER GRID. Organized by The Institution Of Engineers(India) in assiciation with Council Of Power Utilities & APSEB Engineers association 15th & 16 th July 2009 at Hyderabad. WIND POWER INSTALLATIONS IN INDIA.

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Honourable Dr. K.L.Rao

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  1. Honourable Dr. K.L.Rao 108th Birth Day Celebration

  2. SMART POWER GRID Organized by The Institution Of Engineers(India) in assiciation with Council Of Power Utilities & APSEB Engineers association 15th & 16th July 2009 at Hyderabad

  3. WIND POWER INSTALLATIONS IN INDIA

  4. WIND POWER POTENTIAL

  5. Surplus Regions 34,280 MW 2300 2440 16680 35240 MW Installed Capacity : 1,37,000 MW Peak Demand : 1,04,000 MW Peak Availability : 96,000 MW Energy growth : 8-9% / annum 35,800 MW Deficit Regions

  6. Northern region 18,000MW 3nos 800kV HVDC North-Eastern region / Sikkim/Bhutan /Mynmar INTER REGIONAL POWER TRANSMISSION REQUIREMENTS 2022 27,000MW 2 nos 1200kV, AC 20,000MW 2nos 1200kV,AC 10,000MW 2 nos 1200kV, AC 23,000MW 2 nos 1200kV, AC 12,000MW 2nos 800kV HVDC Western region 15,000MW, 2 nos 1200kV,AC 15,000MW 2 nos 1200kV, AC Southern region

  7. Present National Grid

  8. What Is Smart Grid • In principle, the '''smart grid''' is a simple upgrade of 20th century power grids which will provide power from central power generators to a large number of users, and will be capable of routing power in more optimal ways to respond to a very wide range of conditions. • Smart grids increase the connectivity, automation and coordination between suppliers, consumers and networks that perform either long distance Electric power transmission or local distribution tasks. • Electrical Net work need to be connected to Billions of devices and expected to operate reliably .Growing Environmental concerns, the grid needs to be more flexible that it is today accommodating disperse generation, mix of thermal, hydro, Gas, Nuclear, Wind, solar, tidal , renewal resources etc using several energy efficient technologies

  9. Generation mix, automation & Communication

  10. Why smart Grid

  11. Functional requirements of Smart Grid • Should be able to recover itself following Disturbances: • Using real-time information from embedded sensors and automated controls to anticipate, detect, and respond to system problems, a smart grid can automatically avoid or mitigate power outages, power quality problems, and service disruptions • In a distribution networks, if there is a failure of an overhead power line, considering it is operating on a radial basis there is an inevitable loss of power. In the case of urban/city networks that for the most part are fed using underground cables, networks can be designed (through the use of interconnected topologies) such that failure of one part of the network will result in no loss of supply to end users.

  12. Functional requirements of Smart Grid • Smart grid will likely have a control system that analyzes its performance using distributed, autonomous reinforcement learning controllers that have learned successful strategies to govern the behavior of the grid in the face of an ever changing environment such as equipment failures. • Such a system might be used to control electronic switches that are tied to multiple substations with varying costs of generation and reliability

  13. Functional requirements of Smart Grid • Motivate consumers to actively participate in operations of the grid: • A smart grid, will motivate consumers to change their behavior around variable electric rates or to pay vastly increased rates for the privilege of reliable electrical service during high-demand period. • A smart grid incorporates consumer equipment and behavior in grid design, operation, and communication enabling consumers to better control smart appliances and intelligent equipment in homes and businesses, interconnecting energy management systems in smart buildings and enabling consumers to better manage energy use and reduce energy costs. • Advanced communications capabilities equip customers with tools to exploit real-time electricity pricing, incentive-based load reduction signals, or emergency load reduction signals.

  14. Functional requirements of Smart Grid Resilient to disruption: Smart grid technologies better identify and respond to man-made or natural disruptions. Real-time information enables grid operators to isolate affected areas and redirect power flows around damaged facilities. Provide higher quality power that will save money wasted from outages: Cleaner, more stable power, provided by smart grid technologies will reduce downtime and prevent such high losses.

  15. Functional requirements of Smart Grid • Accommodate all generation and storage options: • As smart grids continue to support traditional power loads they also seamlessly interconnect fuel cells, renewables, microturbines, and other distributed generation technologies at local and regional levels. • Integration of small-scale, localized, or on-site power generation allows residential, commercial, and industrial customers to self-generate and sell excess power to the grid with minimal technical or regulatory barriers. This also improves reliability and power quality, reduces electricity costs, and offers more customer choice.

  16. Smart Grid

  17. Functional requirements of Smart Grid • Enable electricity markets to flourish: • Significant increases in bulk transmission capacity will require improvements in transmission grid management. • Such improvements are aimed at creating an open market place where alternative energy sources from geographically distant locations can easily be sold to customers wherever they are located. • Challenges of multi- in-feed HVDC allowing uptake from disparate wind and solar farms- management of fluctuations due to climate conditions involving massive amounts of energy. • Intelligence in distribution grids will enable small producers to generate and sell electricity at the local level using alternative sources such as rooftop-mounted photo voltaic panels, small-scale wind turbines, and micro hydro generators.

  18. Functional requirements of Smart Grid Without the additional intelligence provided by sensors and software designed to react instantaneously to imbalances caused by intermittent sources, such distributed generation can degrade system quality. Run more efficiently: A smart grid can optimize capital assets while minimizing operations and maintenance costs. Optimized power flows reduce waste and maximize use of lowest-cost generation resources. Harmonizing local distribution with interregional energy flows and transmission traffic improves use of existing grid assets and reduces grid congestion and bottlenecks, which can ultimately produce consumer savings.

  19. Operational Features of Smart Grid • The smart grid should allow consumer to communicate with the power companies/ service providers via computers, allow home appliances such as TV, Fridges, washing machines, dish washers, heating, cooling, illumination etc to automatically adjust themselves to take advantage of the low cost power grid. • Load adjustment in the smart grid by warning the customer to delay the draw of power till the larger generators are started to provide the sufficient power to the customer in case there is a steep demand arises such as Cricket Match in India, or a football match in Europe or any other TV programme or abrupt Clouds reducing the natural light and reduction of Photocell output

  20. Operational Features of Smart Grid • Demand response support allows generators and loads to interact in an automated fashion in real time, coordinating demand to flatten spikes. • Eliminating the fraction of demand that occurs in these spikes eliminates the cost of adding reserve generators, cuts wear and tear and extends the life of equipment, and allows users to cut their energy bills by telling low priority devices to use energy only when it is cheapest • Though conventional grid may be following n-1 criteria or in some cases n-2 criteria, however loading of some part of the network may not be avoided under extreme condition. Smart grid will help by diverting the power from overloaded lines to the rest of the network using smart devices.

  21. Operational Features of Smart Grid • Another element of fault tolerance of smart grids is decentralized power generation. Distributed generation allows individual consumers to generate power onsite, using whatever generation method they find appropriate. This allows individual loads to tailor their generation directly to their load, making them independent from grid power failures. • Price signaling to consumers can be given using double tariff electricity meters to encourage customer to use their electric power during night time or weekends, when the overall demand from industry is very low.

  22. Operational Features of Smart Grid • A smart grid precisely limits electrical power down to the residential level, network small-scale distributed energy generation and storage devices, communicate information on operating status and needs, collect information on prices and grid conditions, and move the grid beyond central control to a collaborative network • smart grid would allow utilities to pin point disruptions and easily shift from coal/ hydro/ nuclear power to wind / solar power when the wind is blowing or the sun is shining. Power companies would also be able to adjust power use in homes and business house based on pre arranged agreements. • As customers can choose their electricity suppliers, depending on their different tariff methods, the focus of transportation costs will be high. Reduction of maintenance and replacements costs will require more advanced control.

  23. Operational Features of Smart Grid • Supporters of renewable energy will favor smarter grids, because most renewable energy sources are intermittent in nature, depending on natural phenomena (the sun and the wind) to generate power. Thus, any type of power infrastructure using a significant portion of intermittent renewable energy resources must have means of effectively reducing electrical demand by load shedding in the event that the natural phenomena necessary to generate power do not occur. • By increasing electricity prices exactly when the desired natural phenomena are not present, consumers will, in theory, decrease consumption. However this means prices are unpredictable and literally vary with the weather, at least to the distribution utility.

  24. Standards of Smart Grid • In absence of standards, Berau of Indian Standards, Central Electricity Authority, Manufacturers & other government agencies have to take lead and collaborate with other working groups world wide, those who are actively participating in formulating the standards and the standard specifications. • IEC TC57 has created a family of international standards that can be used as part of the smart grid. These standards include IEC61850 which is an architecture for substation automation, and IEC 61970/61968 — the Common Information Model (CIM). The CIM provides for common semantics to be used for turning data into information.

  25. Standards of Smart Grid Some of the experts believe that the lack of industry standards for security , reliability, data sharing and privacy could result in government money waste on proprietary smart grid technologies that are not inter operable with each other and may be becoming obsolete within a short while, however we may go slow but should not stop.

  26. Technological Support to Smart Grid • Integrated communications: • Some communications are up to date, but are not uniform because they have been developed in an incremental fashion and not fully integrated. In most cases, data is being collected via modem rather than direct network connection. Areas for improvement include: substation automation, demand response, distribution automation, supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA), energy management systems, wireless mesh networks and other technologies, power-line carrier communications, and fiber-optics. Integrated communications will allow for real-time control, information and data exchange to optimize system reliability, asset utilization, and security.

  27. Technological Support to Smart Grid • Sensing and measurement: • Core duties are evaluating congestion and grid stability, monitoring equipment health, energy theft prevention, and control strategies support. Technologies include: • advanced microprocessor meters (smart meter) and meter reading equipment, • wide-area monitoring systems, • dynamic line rating (typically based on online readings by Distributed temperature sensing combined with Real time thermal rating (RTTR) systems), • electromagnetic signature measurement/analysis, • time-of-use and real-time pricing tools, • advanced switches and cables, • backscatter radio technology, and • digital protective relay

  28. Technological Support to Smart Grid Smart meters A smart grid replaces analog mechanical meters with digital meters that record usage in real time. Smart meters are similar to Advanced Metering Infrastructure meters and provide a communication path extending from generation plants to electrical outlets (smart sockets) and other smart grid-enabled devices. By customer option, such devices can shut down during times of peak demand. A Wide-Area Measurement Systems''' (WAMS) Phasor networks of PMUS that can provide real-time monitoring on a regional and national scale. Many in the power systems engineering community believe that the Northeast blackout of 2003 in USA would have been contained to a much smaller area if a wide area phasor measurement network was in place

  29. Technological Support to Smart Grid Synchrophasor Technology: Synchrophasor technology has the potential to change the economics of power delivery. It is estimated that using synchrophasors to directly measure the power system will allow at least a 20% increase in efficiency of energy transmission in the United States. The PMU's ability to rapidly sense system conditions supports the kind of automated self healing of anomalies in the network needed to not only deliver lower cost power with fewer blackouts, but to support more complex power generation scenarios required by alternative power sources. PMUs can sense and provide data required to best correct imbalances caused by intermittent power sources and distributed generation, which would if unchecked would degrade power quality.

  30. Technological Support to Smart Grid Advanced Components: Innovations in superconductivity, fault tolerance, storage, power electronics, and diagnostics components are changing fundamental abilities and characteristics of grids. Technologies within these broad R&D categories include: flexible alternating current transmission system devices, high voltage direct current, first and second generation superconducting wire, high temperature superconducting cable, distributed energy generation and storage devices, composite conductors, and intelligent appliances

  31. Technological Support to Smart Grid Advanced control: Power system automation enables rapid diagnosis of and precise solutions to specific grid disruptions or outages. These technologies rely on and contribute to each of the other four key areas. Three technology categories for advanced control methods are: distributed intelligent agents (control systems), analytical tools (software algorithms and high-speed computers), and operational applications (SCADA, substation automation, demand response, etc). Using artificial intelligence programming techniques, Fujian power grid in China created a wide area protection system that is rapidly able to accurately calculate a control strategy and execute it

  32. Technological Support to Smart Grid Improved interfaces and decision support: Information systems that reduce complexity so that operators and managers have tools to effectively and efficiently operate a grid with an increasing number of variables. Technologies include visualization techniques that reduce large quantities of data into easily understood visual formats, software systems that provide multiple options when systems operator actions are required, and simulators for operational training and “what-if” analysis.

  33. Perception of the utilities on Smart Grid Peak load optimization: To reduce demand during the high cost peak usage periods, communications and metering technologies inform smart devices in the home and business when energy demand is high and track how much electricity is used and when it is used. To motivate them to cut back use and perform what is called '''peak curtailment''' or '''peak levelling''', prices of electricity are increased during high demand periods, and decreased during low demand periods. It is thought that consumers and businesses will tend to consume less during high demand periods if it is possible for consumers and consumer devices to be aware of the high price premium for using electricity at peak periods. When businesses and consumers see a direct economic benefit to become more energy efficient, the theory is that they will including energy cost of operation into their consumer device and building construction decisions The Deepawali / Christmas tree light could be addressed using dynamic demand mangement systems. Peak load optimization: To reduce demand during the high cost peak usage periods, communications and metering technologies inform smart devices in the home and business when energy demand is high and track how much electricity is used and when it is used. To motivate them to cut back use and perform what is called '''peak curtailment''', prices of electricity are increased during high demand periods, and decreased during low demand periods. It is thought that consumers and businesses will tend to consume less during high demand periods if it is possible for consumers and consumer devices to be aware of the high price premium for using electricity at peak periods. When businesses and consumers see a direct economic benefit to become more energy efficient, the theory is that they will including energy cost of operation into their consumer device and building construction decisions The Deepawali / Christmas tree light could be addressed using dynamic demand mangement systems.

  34. Perception of the utilities on Smart Grid Assets optimization / Cost reduction: Peak load optimization will also reduce the amount of spinning reserve that electric utilities have to keep on stand-by, as the load curve will level itself through a combination of invisible hand free-market capitalism and central control of a large number of devices by power management services that pay consumers a portion of the peak power saved by turning their devices off. To economists, this is a form of rent seeking. Consumers have the right to consume expensive power even during peak periods, and give this up if they are offered a share of the savings of not having to provide it. The opportunity only exists because the consumer doesn't pay the real price of meeting peak demand. Peak load optimization: To reduce demand during the high cost peak usage periods, communications and metering technologies inform smart devices in the home and business when energy demand is high and track how much electricity is used and when it is used. To motivate them to cut back use and perform what is called '''peak curtailment''' or '''peak levelling''', prices of electricity are increased during high demand periods, and decreased during low demand periods. It is thought that consumers and businesses will tend to consume less during high demand periods if it is possible for consumers and consumer devices to be aware of the high price premium for using electricity at peak periods. When businesses and consumers see a direct economic benefit to become more energy efficient, the theory is that they will including energy cost of operation into their consumer device and building construction decisions The Deepawali / Christmas tree light could be addressed using dynamic demand mangement systems.

  35. Perception of the utilities on Smart Grid Peak load optimization: To reduce demand during the high cost peak usage periods, communications and metering technologies inform smart devices in the home and business when energy demand is high and track how much electricity is used and when it is used. To motivate them to cut back use and perform what is called '''peak curtailment''' or '''peak levelling''', prices of electricity are increased during high demand periods, and decreased during low demand periods. It is thought that consumers and businesses will tend to consume less during high demand periods if it is possible for consumers and consumer devices to be aware of the high price premium for using electricity at peak periods. When businesses and consumers see a direct economic benefit to become more energy efficient, the theory is that they will including energy cost of operation into their consumer device and building construction decisions The Deepawali / Christmas tree light could be addressed using dynamic demand mangement systems. Loss reduction: Using more and more non conventional energy resources for feeding remote load centers from the conventional source of energy will reduce transmission losses substantially, improves voltage profile, reduces the transmission line loading and thus also increasing the reliability of the transmission system. Reduction in power Consumption: A year long study conducted by the department of US Energy Pacific North west National Laboratory found that the consumer who had the access to information on their Power Use & Pricing saved more than 10% on their Electricity Bills by using their decision, when to use how much power. The Energy department have projected the savings in the Power consumption bills with the smart grid in place some where 5 to 15% Electrical Power & Research Institute of USA (EPRI) in their 2008 report indicates that with the smart grid in place the total Energy Consumption of the USA will reduce by 4.3%

  36. Perception of the utilities on Smart Grid Apprehensions: Some of the utilities may have certain apprehensions in adoption of smart grid technologies, such as : regulatory environments that don't reward utilities for operational efficiency, consumer concerns over privacy, social concerns over "fair" availability of electricity, social concerns over abuses of information leverage, limited ability of utilities to rapidly transform their business and operational environment to take advantage of smart grid technologies. Investment returns as some components, like the Power System Stabilizers (PSS) installed on generators are very expensive, require complex integration in the grid's control system, are needed only during emergencies, but are only effective if other suppliers on the network have them but where is the incentive goes? Peak load optimization: To reduce demand during the high cost peak usage periods, communications and metering technologies inform smart devices in the home and business when energy demand is high and track how much electricity is used and when it is used. To motivate them to cut back use and perform what is called '''peak curtailment''' or '''peak levelling''', prices of electricity are increased during high demand periods, and decreased during low demand periods. It is thought that consumers and businesses will tend to consume less during high demand periods if it is possible for consumers and consumer devices to be aware of the high price premium for using electricity at peak periods. When businesses and consumers see a direct economic benefit to become more energy efficient, the theory is that they will including energy cost of operation into their consumer device and building construction decisions The Deepawali / Christmas tree light could be addressed using dynamic demand mangement systems.

  37. Perception of the utilities on Smart Grid Peak load optimization: To reduce demand during the high cost peak usage periods, communications and metering technologies inform smart devices in the home and business when energy demand is high and track how much electricity is used and when it is used. To motivate them to cut back use and perform what is called '''peak curtailment''' or '''peak levelling''', prices of electricity are increased during high demand periods, and decreased during low demand periods. It is thought that consumers and businesses will tend to consume less during high demand periods if it is possible for consumers and consumer devices to be aware of the high price premium for using electricity at peak periods. When businesses and consumers see a direct economic benefit to become more energy efficient, the theory is that they will including energy cost of operation into their consumer device and building construction decisions The Deepawali / Christmas tree light could be addressed using dynamic demand mangement systems. Apprehensions:… Most utilities may find it difficult to justify installing a communications infrastructure for a single application (e.g. meter reading) and therefore a utility must typically identify several applications that will use the same communications infrastructure – for example, reading a meter, monitoring power quality, remote connection and disconnection of customers, enabling demand response, etc. Ideally, the communications infrastructure will not only support near-term applications, but unanticipated applications that will arise in the future. Some features of smart grids may draw opposition from industries that currently are, or hope to provide similar services for example competition with cable and DSL Internet providers Providers of SCADA control systems for grids may have have intentionally designed proprietary hardware, protocols and software so that they cannot inter-operate with other systems in order to tie its customers to the vendor.

  38. Security Concerns for Smart Grid Security Concerns: Despite the weaknesses of power network, there has NEVER been a single attack on a power network in any of the country world wide, however the deployment of smart grid may be slowed until security vulnerabilities are addressed. As hackers can cause a major blackout after breaking into smart grid system. Some of the security experts’ opinion is that with a meager investment and having background of electronics & software engineering, hacker can take over the control of smart meters and mass manipulate the services to the home and the business houses. Hacker can also increase or decrease the power demand drastically disrupting load & generation balance, causing blackouts in the local network, which may have cascading effect on the National grid. It may be difficult to access the damage at this stage on this account.

  39. Benefits of Smart Grid • With the installation of two way energy meters renewable • energy options are promoted. Small scale devices and networking • systems can help in monitoring the Power Consumption and more • informed strategic decisions in Power Consumption there by • reducing the imports of conventional energy resources. • The integration of Information Technology & the Automation technology with the existing Electrical Network, will create a more efficient, more flexible, easily controllable envirenmental friendly and reliable grid, however 100’s of thousands of kms of Transmission & Distribution network integrated with thousands of Power Plants and hundred’s of thousands of dispersed generation units spread all over the country is not a one day job to convert it into a smart grid nor it is so cheap to invest a heavy amount on it.

  40. Government initiatives for Smart Grid • Power & Telecom Policy • Integration of power and telecom policy may be introduced. • Consumers may own their own power meter data explicitly and should have a choice of service providers for communication and power management, rather than allowing power management to exist in its own separate "silo“ • Green house gases policy: • Smart grid is an aggregate term for a set of related technologies on which government has invited the attention. • Demand side management enabling grid connection of • -distributed generation, • -Power from photovoltaic arrays, • - small wind turbines, • - micro hydros, • - or even combined heat power generators • in buildings;

  41. Government initiatives for Smart Grid • Demand side management also incorporate • - grid energy storage for distributed generation • - load balancing • -eliminating or containing grid ascading failures. • The increased efficiency and reliability of the mart grid is expected to • save consumers money, fuel, import of conventional energy • resources and help reduce CO2 emissions • GDP: • Smart Grid increases GDP by creating more new, Green-collar worker energy jobs related to renewable energy industry manufacturing, plug-in electric vehicles, solar panel and wind turbine generation,energy conservation construction

  42. International Perspective of Smart Grid • Italy: • The earliest, and still largest, example of a smart grid completed in • 2005, • The Telegestore project was highly unusual in the utility world, as the • company • - designed and manufactured their own meters, • - acted as their own system integrator and • - developed their own system software. • The Telegestore project is widely regarded as the first commercial • scale use of smart grid technology and • Delivers annual savings of 500 million € at a project cost of 2.1 billion

  43. International Perspective of Smart Grid • United States: • The city of Austin, Texas building its smart • grid since 2003, • First replaced 1/3 of its manual meters with smart meters that • communicate via a wireless Mesh networking • Currently manages 200,000 devices real-time (smart meters, smart • thermostats, and sensors) • Expects to be supporting 500,000 devices real-time in 2009 • Boulder, Colorado completed the first phase of its smart grid • project in August 2008. Both systems use the smart meter • as a gateway to the Home Automation • Network (HAN) • Controls Smart Sockets & Devices

  44. United States… • Some HAN designers favor decoupling control functions from the meter, out of concern of future mismatches with new standards and technologies available from the fast moving business segment • of home electronic devices. • Smart grid consistently receives more than half venture capital • investment in USA • In 2009 President Barack Obama asked the United States • Congress to act without delay to pass legislation that included • doubling alternative energy production in the next three years, • reduce energy consumption and tackle the climate change by • building a new smart grid International Perspective of Smart Grid

  45. International Perspective of Smart Grid • United States… • George W. Arnold has been appointed as first National coordinator for Smart Grid Interoperability. • National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST) announces Three Phase Plan for Smart Grid interoperability project

  46. International Perspective of Smart Grid • Canada: • Hydro One, in Ontario, Canada has taken large-scale Smart • Grid initiative, deploying a standards-compliant • Communications infrastructure . • By the end of 2010, the system will serve 1.3 million customers • in the province of Ontario. • The initiative won the Best AMR Initiative in North America • award from the Utility Planning Net • The government of Ontario, Canada, through the Energy • Conservation Responsibility Act in 2006, has mandated the • installation of Smart meters in all Ontario businesses and • households by 2010

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